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[idm] enemies of music part 3. the end.
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THE POLITICS OF PARTYINGPart of what is at stake here is the definition of political. The arguments about the nature of rave culture come down to different notions about what can and cannot be considered political, oppositional or resistant. If we are to accept raving and similar practices as politics, then we need to address exactly what we consider politics to be. In Britain, raving has been aptly described as "Hedonism in Hard Times"-- the insistence on enjoyment no matter what the circumstances: no matter how bad the social situation, these people will have fun (Redhead 2). Many ravers would themselves reject the word politics in favor of the term spirituality to describe what they do. This term is an expression of the link between themselves, everyone else, and the planet. Nevertheless, this can still be construed as political. My profoundest political revelation (is revelation the same as the revolution of the mind?) came not during a strike, or at a committee meeting to discuss the future of socialism: it came at a rave...afterwards I knew, with an understanding that went deeper than the rational, that the land was truly mine, all of the land, all mine and all everyone else's at the same time; that the land contained ecstasy, beauty, sensuality, love, and that the pulsing heartbeat of the music was rippling through her body like a shiver and she was being awakened by it. Take it or leave it: it is my belief. (Stone 12). Foucault's second definition of subjugated knowledges is "a whole set of knowledges that have been disqualified as inadequate to their task or insufficiently elaborated: naive knowledges, located low down on the hierarchy, beneath the required level of cognition or scientificity" (Power/Knowledge 82), a definition which well fits the ravers' knowledge of the world stated by Stone. For people in Britain, and around the world, raving is that exercise of freedom which is its own guarantee (Foucault, Reader 245). If we accept that fun can be political, then raving can be a political practice which challenges our very notions about ourselves. It subverts dominant images of subjectivity and discipline, it states that politics does not have to be negative, nor does it have to be cooped up in committee rooms, and that protests don't have to be angry. Raving shows that a positive assertion of values and practices, which change the way a large proportion of the population live their lives, can be more constructive and affirmative than any political party (in the traditional sense). Raving also undermines some of the most basic underpinnings of our society. In Discipline and Punish, The History of Sexuality, and other works, Foucault outlined how the subject is created in modern western societies through practices of discipline, and the power relations involved in this. The modern subject is produced as an individual by various practices through which "the subject is led to observe, to analyse, to decipher, and to recognise himself as a domain of possible knowledge" (Foucault, "Power, Moral Values" 14). The practice of raving undermines, the kinds of notions of subjectivity which have led to the creation of the modern subject in the form which Foucault describes. This can be illustrated through two of the central aspects of rave culture: music and dancing. Rave music, or techno,(FN13) undermines traditional notions of the creation, performance and dissemination of music. To state this polemically, "techno-rave puts an end to nearly four hundred years of the great European bourgeois individual in music" (Tagg 219). In Thornton's terms, rave is not a live, but a record culture. Yet the deconstruction of music goes even beyond the simple change in live performance becoming secondary to DJ's spinning records. Techno is created on machines, using samplers, computers, and drum machines. If live instruments are used, they are generally processed through a sampler, with the sounds cut up and transformed in the process. Techno artists also make heavy use of samples, often using sounds not generally heard in music--trains, planes, animals, running water and the wind being but a few examples. In its live format, DJs will often play two or more records simultaneously, altering their speed and pitch and mixing them together to create something quite different from the original product. No longer is pop music produced and--crucially--owned by musicians recording "original" tracks based on melodic and harmonic principles. Ambient and techno can be made on computers in bedrooms, and are more concerned with texture than melody. House music can be created purely by mixing together other peoples records, using sampling technology. Many records central to E-culture aren't even available commercially--they're DJ-only "white labels." Much of what is played at clubs is created on the spot by DJs. There is no "original." Dance music can be imitated, even co- opted, but it remains, by nature, subversive. (Manning 41-42). Techno disorganizes our basic notion of art, and the meaning of signs, "by continually reproducing its own means of production-- sequencing and sampling--it becomes like a reflexive utterance that is capable only of mediating upon itself: there is no ultimate founding narrative presence" (Stanley 111). Techno decenters the subject, refusing the pop star or the cultural icon as the glorified subject. Tagg has illustrated how western popular music of the twentieth century serves to glorify the individual subject, from the jazz band leader through to the guitar hero and pop singer, as the basis for production. In this way, pop music works alongside Foucault's disciplinary practices to create the modern subject as individual. Techno decenters this: monocentric types of socialisation strategy are clearly less popular with today's ravers because...they do not go much for cohesive melodic statements and seem to eschew, both musically and socially, big figures. On the other hand, rave music contains plenty of small figures constituting plenty of ground, plenty of "environment." (Tagg 218). It is not only the music which refuses the performer/audience/star structure. On the dance floor "the mastering gaze has disappeared. For this reason, dancing to show off ha s gone, even though a communal adoration occur s because people pile onto the stage or anything else that is raised above the crowd" (Rietveld 63). The raver does not dance for any external display. Instead, the aim of the dance could be identified in a new interpretation of Foucault's "Omnes et Singulatum," in that one becomes all, or rather the distinction between one and all disappears. It is a dance for the self, in that it is a dance to lose the self. But it is also a communal loss--a loss of self that occurs in the setting of the rave. This is part of a change in concepts of identity: a decentering of the subject in which identity, at least during the rave (one would be hard pressed to argue that ravers can successfully carry this into all aspects of life), is changed from the Cartesian "I think, therefore I am," to a communal subjectivity. Rephrasing the Cartesian formula, the ravers self could perhaps find expression in the statement "we dance, therefore, we are." In dancing to lose the self, ravers achieve a kind of liberation in an escape from identity, and in reaching " a place where nobody is, but everybody belongs" (Melechi 37). This is not a clear cut issue. In the analytic terms available to us, the loss of individual self in the communal dance becomes a somewhat ambiguous event. Is this simply escape from the every day, an avoidance of the "real world?" What does it mean to lose oneself? The combination of music, the communal dance, and (for some) the use of Ecstasy, results in something which is, for most, undefinable. Ravers talk about a "vibe," but when asked about exactly what happens on the dance floor, they are faced with a failure of language, an attempt to describe the indescribable. Rather, they give descriptions such as "it was wild," "absolutely unbelievable, there wasn't anything like it," or "this is not dancing, this is a religion" (Rietveld 63). Perhaps the effect would best be compared to the religious ecstasy some groups claim to reach when communing with god. The loss of self, and the inability to describe the experience (how can I properly describe an event at which I was not strictly present?) suggest a complete refusal of discourse and of knowledge that is constituted in and by language (Rietveld 65). One effect of Ecstasy is to decenter sexuality and libidinal pleasure, disrupting Freudian concepts of the self and the centering of sexuality in the genitals. "E cstacy made the user return to a pre-Oedipal stage ...where sexuality is polymorphous and where sensuality engages the entire body" (Rietveld 54). There also occurs in the dance a unification of the self, a coming together of mind and body, a state of delirium which is "non-subjective and smooth, as all...connections and functions...give way to simple intensities of feeling" (Jordan 130).. In Freudian terms, what occurs is a unity between the Id and the Ego, and a unification of these with the sensuality of the body and the intensity of the moment of dance (Maxwell). Through rejection of the individual/subjective self, the practice of raving puts itself outside of the official discourses. It becomes a practice which is impossible to know, and impossible to even properly designate as "other." It refuses categorization because it is an experience which cannot be described by anything other than the act itself. The raver "surrenders to the void in a Dionysian hedonism of an entirely internal satisfaction of desire through the sacrifice of the self to the dance" (Stanley 107). It refuses a label of simple deviancy because "it is not a desire to demonstrate deviancy but merely to attain a knowledge at the limit of experience" (Stanley 108). Excitement, not deviance, is sought, and excitement comes through the dance, the loss of self, and the refusal of the knowing gaze. So how can this be considered a political statement, or even a statement of resistance? It is at this point that we can return to the earlier discussion of space, boundaries, and power. The rejection of a certain notion of subjectivity, the negotiation of alternative spaces (I would not really say they are "won," as the warehouse or field is never a permanent hold--rather the space is used and then the parties move on) are powerful forms of resistance in that they reject the very possibility of being incorporated into the realm of governmentality as we know it. In this sense, raving meets Foucault's criteria for a meaningful political action: it refuses the basis upon which the system is built, rather than working within it. "Those who resist or rebel against a form of power cannot merely be content to denounce violence or criticise an institution. Nor is it enough to cast the blame on reason in general. What has to be questioned is the form of rationality at stake" (Foucault, "Omnes" 254). The event/space of raving facilitates the emergence of alternative values, such as those escribed above. The narratives of dissensus as a narrative of opposition and the spatial form which contains and enables these narratives to become significant texts of the everyday attaching to alternative configurations of meaning and reality become a significant realization in the formulation of nonrepressive, antirhetorical, antihegemonic formulations of power and identity in the form of an ethics of viral communication. (Stanley 99). These narratives are powerful because they reject determinacy and/or stability. The spaces in which raving takes place cannot be entirely known or controlled in any way except the general--as warehouses, or fields. The nomadic nature of the event, caused in part by the law itself in its attempt to control raving through making it illegal, means that the kind of power which needs to know and control in detail may never be exerted over the rave. This evasion is made possible by constant speed and movement, which are made evident in three ways. Firstly, they are manifested in the organization and communication networks of the culture. Events drawing together thousands of people can be organized, and advertised solely by word of mouth in a matter of days (Maylon, "Raving" 12). Secondly, people often travel to raves in convoys, sometimes with several hundred cars, causing confusion and making it impossible for the police to stop them. Lastly, the dance itself is caught up in movement and desire. Control is rejected, as " s peed and movement ensure that the self is no longer (nor can be) subject to an external gaze and that there is only the giddy neutralisation of self-space in a dissolution of boundaries" (Stanley 114). It is within the space opened up by this movement that dissent and resistance can be expressed. However, it is the difficulty of characterizing raving as an event of solely dissent or resistance?the ambiguities involved in the practice--that lead to the real undermining of control. If it was a practice that were more easily known, more obviously and straightforwardly resistant, its challenge could be met and known. The denial of such knowledge, or of the ability to place raving solidly into an us/them dichotomy, poses a far greater challenge to modern systems of power. This is not to deny the necessity of political activism, but rather to call for the category of the political to be broadened, to assert that politics and fun can go hand in hand, and that the scope of meaningful action can be far more inclusive than simply challenging capital, because, in the end, capital is not the only problem in our society. The politics and actions of youth culture may not be perfect, but this should not lead to its their dismissal as inadequate forms of protest. If anything, rave culture may prove to be one of the most dynamic political movements of recent years. Added material. FOOTNOTES1 Despite going global since its beginnings in Ibiza and Manchester, the majority of the somewhat limited literature on rave refers specifically to the British rave scene. This article, then, concentrates on the rave scene in its British context. However, while the discussion of the political/social climate is entirely British in context, I would tentatively propose that the wider implications of rave culture discussed in this essay may very well be relevant for the rave culture as a global phenomena. 2 The central texts from this body of work are Cohen's Folk Devils and Moral Panics (1972), Hebdige's Subculture: the Meaning of Style (1979), and the collection Resistance Through Rituals (1976), edited by Stuart Hall and Tony Jefferson. 3 The terms "postmodern" and "postmodernist" are blankets which attempt to cover a vast number of widely varied and often unrelated or directly opposed theories. Nevertheless, the word will continue to be used, as will this acknowledgment of the complexities involved in its use which, paradoxically, allows me to use it. 4 House music is a particular style of techno, employing 4-4 beats, and often utilizing vocal samples and keyboard effects for a more organic feel than techno, which relies more on computer generated sounds. 5 I have been involved in rave culture for nearly two years, during which time I have met many people who partake fully in the culture while avoiding the drugs. However, see also Merchant and Macdonald 20-21. 6 Found in, respectively, the Manchester Evening News, on May 13, 1991, on the front page, and The Sun, on November 24, 1988. 7 See in particular Cohen's Folk Devils and Moral Panics. 8 The academic is, of course, also implicated in the interplay of power and knowledge, perhaps in an even more "pure" form than any of the other discourses involved. This is not necessarily a bad thing, however. For Foucault, all claims to knowledge involve power, and vice-versa (Foucault, Power/Knowledge 85). This does not mean that we should not strive for knowledge, but rather that we should incorporate awareness of what it is we are doing into the project. 9 See Max Weber's The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. 10 Again, as with postmodernism, the term "society" in this context oversimplifies a complex notion, and a complex relationship between rave and other discourses, and results in the kind of self/other dichotomy I would rather avoid. However, within this context, "society" or "the social" seems to be the most appropriate term when rave is constructed as "anti-social" and thus "anti-society.". 11 Rave values could also be seen as critical of wider social values. However, my evidence is almost exclusively British, and I will thus restrict my argument to Britain. 12 " P ower relations are rooted deep in the social nexus, not reconstituted 'above society as a supplementary structure whose radical effacement one could perhaps dream of. In any case, to live in a society is to live in such a way that action upon other actions is possible--and in fact ongoing. A society without power relations can only be an abstraction.... T o say that there cannot be a society without power relations is not to say either that those which are established are necessary, or, in any case, that power constitutes a fatality at the heart of societies, such that is cannot be undermined. Instead I would say that the analysis, elaboration, and bringing into question of power relations and the 'agonism between power relations and the intransitivity of freedom is a permanent political task inherent in all social existence" (Foucault "Subject and Power" 222-23). 13 Referring to all music played at raves as techno is highly simplistic, the equivalent of calling all pre-20th century music "classical." However, techno is the term which has made its way into the mainstream as a blanket for the kind of music played at raves, and as such is the most apt single term under which to refer to this kind of dance music. WORKS CITEDAdorno, Theodor. Introduction to the Sociology of Music. New York: Seasbury, 1976. "Better than Well." Economist 6 Apr. 1996: 91-92. Cohen, Stanley. Folk Devils And Moral Panics: The Creation of the Mods and Rockers. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1980. D'Angelo, Ed. "The Moral Culture of Drug Prohibition." Humanist Sept.- Oct. 1994: 3-7. Foley, Conor. "Virtual Protest." New Statesman 18 Nov. 1994: 47-48. Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. New York: Pantheon, 1977. Foucault, Michel. The Foucault Reader. Ed. Paul Rabinow. New York: Pantheon, 1984. Foucault, Michel. "Omnes et Singulatum." Tanner Lectures on Human Values. Vol. 2. Ed. S. McMurrin. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1981. 225-54. Foucault, Michel. Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviews and Other Writings, 1972-1977. Ed. Colin Gordon. New York: Pantheon, 1980. Foucault, Michel. "Power, Moral Values and the Intellectual." History of the Present 4 (1988): 1-2, 11-15. Foucault, Michel. "The Subject and Power." Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics. Ed. Dreyfuss and Rabinow. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1982. 208-26. Glanzrock, Paul. "A Dose of Generation X." Psychology Today May-June 1994: 16-17. Goodman, Anthony H. "The Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994." Capital and Class 56 (1995): 9-13. Hall, Stuart, and Tony Jefferson, eds. Resistance Through Rituals: Youth Subcultures in Post-War Britain. London: Unwin Hyman, 1976. Hebdige, Dick. Subculture: the Meaning of Style. London and New York: Methuen, 1979. Jordan, Tim. "Collective Bodies: Raving and the Politics of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari." Body and Society 1.1 (1995): 125-44. Little, Kenneth. "Surveilling Cirque Archaos: Transgression and the Spaces of Power in Popular Entertainment." Journal of Popular Culture 29.1 (1995): 15-27. Manning, Tony. "Meet the E-Culturati." New Statesman 23 Feb. 1996: 41-42. Maxwell, Ian. "Explaining the Groove: Discourses of Community and Culture as Folk-Explanation for Intense Affective Experience." Paper presented at Pacific Currents: International Association for the Study of Popular Music, New Zealand/Australia Annual General Meeting, Auckland University, 19-21 July 1996. Maylon, Tim. "Dancing With Death." New Statesman 7 April 1995: 24, 41. Maylon, Tim. "Raving Injustice." New Statesman 5 Aug. 1994: 12-13. Melchi, Antonio. "The Ecstasy of Disappearance." Rave Off: Politics and Deviance in Contemporary Youth Culture. Ed. Steve Redhead. Aldershot: Avebury, 1993: 29-40. Merchant, Jacqueline, and Robert MacDonald. "Youth & Rave Culture, Ecstasy and Health." Youth & Policy 45 (1994): 16-38. Murphie, Andrew, and Edward Scheer. "Dance Parties: Capital, Culture and Simulation." From Pop to Punk to Postmodernism: Popular Music and Australian Culture from the 1960s to the 1990s. Ed. Philip Hayward. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1992. 172-84. Platt, Steve. "Rattling the Gates." New Statesman 29 July 1994: 14-15. Redhead, Steve, ed. Rave Off: Politics and Deviance in Contemporary Youth Culture. Aldershot: Avebury, 1993. Rietveld, Hillegonda. "Living the Dream." Rave Off: Politics and Deviance in Contemporary Youth Culture. Aldershot: Avebury, 1993: 41-78. Russell, Kristian. "Lysergia Suberbia." Rave Off: Politics and Deviance in Contemporary Youth Culture. Aldershot: Avebury, 1993: 91-174. Smith, Andrew James. "The Third Generation." New Statesman 11 Sept. 1992: 31-32. Stanley, Christopher. "Teenage Kicks: Urban Narratives of Dissent not Deviance." Crime, Law & Social Change 23 (1995): 91-119. Stone, C. J. "Party Politics." New Statesman 29 July 1994: 12-15. Tagg, Philip. "From Refrain to Rave: The Decline of Figure and the Rise of Ground." Popular Music 13.2 (1994): 209-22. Tetzlaff, David. "Divide and Conquer: Popular Culture and Social Control in Late Capitalism." Media, Culture and Society 13.1 (1991): 9-33. Thornton, Sarah. Club Cultures. Cambridge: Policy Press, 1995. Weber, Max. The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. London: Allen and Unwin, 1976. __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! 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